Does Romans 1:26-27 apply to all homosexual relationships?

Rom. 1:26-27 ESV states, "For this reason God gave them up to dishonorable passions. For their women exchanged natural relations for those that are contrary to nature; and the men likewise gave up natural relations with women and were consumed with passion for one another, men committing shameless acts with men and receiving in themselves the due penalty for their error."

It is well-known that sexual orgies occurred in Roman society, especially during the observance of certain pagan holidays, "That the rites in some of the cults at least were orgiastic and tended to produce emotional extravagance and breaches of the mores when both sexes were thrown into intimate relations. . . ."2 Some of the most notorious orgies occurred during Bacchanalia, which was a cult that started in southern Italy but was associated with the Greek cult of Dionysia.3 In both cults, the participants drank wine and participated in orgies, some of which were violent.4 The Roman government officially banned Bacchanalia in 186 B.C.; however, citizens still secretly celebrated it for a long time afterwards in southern Italy.5

In the cult of Cybele, the priests were self-castrated eunuchs who, according to the Greek scholar Apuleius, would have homosexual relations with strong young citizens (no alcohol is mentioned).6 Members of the cult of Isis worshiped the fertility goddess Isis, and they participated in temple prostitution (again, no alcohol is mentioned).7 The members of the cult of Bona Dea, known as the "good goddess," were probably only female and they would hold celebrations in which they danced, drank copious amounts of wine, and had sexual relations with men afterwards (or if they couldn't find men, then an ass, according to the historian Juvenal).8